Title:
1Lighting the Way to Technology through
Innovation
ILPB Metamaterial Research
- SUNY at Buffalo
- Department of Chemistry
2Overview
- Basic Metamaterial Concepts
- ILPB Capabilities
- ILPB NIM Group
- ILPB Metamaterial Research
- Approaches to NIM fabrication
- Experimental and Experimental Results
- Publications and Presentations
3Electromagnetic Material Properties
The electromagnetic response of a material is
defined by its electromagnetic properties
permittivity ? and permeability ?
Conventional Materials
Plasmas
no transmission
Negative Index Materials
Split Rings
no transmission
4Metamaterials
Metamaterials artificially engineered materials
possessing electro-magnetic properties that do
not exist in naturally occurring materials.
Perfect Lens (Pendry, 2000)
Gunnar Dolling, et. al., Opt. Exp.14, 1842 (2006)
5ILPB Metamaterial Research/Development
Capabilities
Modeling - Design - Fabrication - Characterization
NANOPHOTONICSMaterials - DevicesSystems
PLASMONICS NanoparticlesNanostructure Media
Metamaterials NIM ApplicationsNovel Photonic
Devices
6Characterization Facilities
7ILPB NIM Group
- Prof. Paras N. Prasad Nanophotonics, Photonic
Devices and Materials - Prof. Edward Furlani Multiphysics and
Photonics Modeling, Device Physics - Dr. Alexander Baev Multiscale Modeling,
Material and Device Physics - Dr. Heong Oh - Polymer Chemistry/Chiral Media
- Researcher Rui Hu Materials Synthesis and
Characterization - Researcher Won Jin Kim Polymer Chemistry,
Material Synthesis - Researcher Shobha Shukla - Lithography for
Nanostructured Media
8ILPB Metamaterials Research
ILPB is pursuing a bottom-up approach to NIM
fabrication
Bottom-up approach Chiral NIM Media(Chemical
Synthesis/Assembly)
Top-down approach Resonant Metallic
Nanostructures(Lithography)
Chiral molecules doped with plasmonic
nanoinclusions
Achieves e lt 0, m lt 0 from EM coupling between
paired plasmonic elements
9Chiral Media Development
Theoretical modeling Preliminary quantum
chemical and EM modeling predicts enhanced
chirality and lowered permittivity
Selected model structures Helical polyacetylenes
Plasmonic nanoparticles attached to chiral
components lower dielectric permittivity
Proposed synthetic route to chiral components
10Basic Chiral Media Relations
Current Status of Chiral Media Properties
Dnplasmonic 0.5 kcomposite 10-2
Target Properties for next year Dnplasmonic 1
kcomposite 5 x 10-1
11Materials Development
- Objectives
- Development/characterization of composite
material with lowered refractive index. - Development/characterization of composite
material with enhanced chirality. - Strategy
- In-situ generation of gold/silver nanoparticles
to obtain a high load in the host material. - Synthesis of molecular units with high chirality
and its polymeric helical form. - Characterization.
- Multiscale modeling and feedback.
- Realization
- The use of photochemical decomposition of noble
metal precursors to generate plasmonic particles
loaded composites.
12PVP host doped with silver nanoparticles.
Suppression of the refractive index on the high
energy side of plasmonic resonance.
Dn 0.5
Dn
l 337 nm
13Approaches planned for enhancing the load
- Higher load of NPs may be possible with
- Using direct mixing in the organic phase.
Example PMMA host doped with gold nanoparticles
prepared in chlorobenzene. - Using templates with high density of binding
sites. - In-situ generation by two-photon lithography.
- Using nanoparticles of different morphology
- Nanorods.
- Multipods.
- Core-shell structures.
14TEM image of gold nanorods
TEM image of gold nanoshell
Plasmonic band tuning Ormosil/gold NPs
Gold nanorods
Aspect ratio dependence
15Materials Development
- Objectives
- Development/characterization of composite
material with lowered refractive index. - Development/characterization of composite
material with enhanced chirality. - Strategy
- In-situ generation of gold/silver nanoparticles
to obtain a high loading in the host material. - Synthesis of molecular units with high chirality
and its polymeric helical form. - Characterization.
- Multiscale modeling and feedback.
- Realization
- Synthesis of new chiral molecule, M-chitosan, and
mixing it with - water soluble gold nanoparticles.
16Material Development
17Experimental activity Mixing of gold NPs with
chiral template (M-chitosan, N 10-4 M)
New bands due to gold conjugation
1.34mg/ml
Increasing concentration Au NPs
1.16mg/ml
0.97mg/ml
0.76mg/ml
0.53mg/ml
0.28mg/ml
Modified Chitosan, 1mg/ml
First observation of nanoparticle induced
chirality
TEM image of the mixture Partial aggregation is
evident
18Possible mechanisms of gold conjugation
Larger particles Coating-like arrangement. Plasmo
n mediated coupling results in new band.
Smaller particles Induced conformational effect
- helical arrangement due to chiral template.
Check-up Change particle morphology (nanorods),
composition and size
19Characterization
- Using CD measurements to obtain chirality
parameter. - Using Kramers-Kronig transform of reflectance
spectra to obtain refractive index.
Measured reflectance
CD spectrum
KK transform
Lowered n
Chirality parameter ? obtained from CD spectrum
Complex RI
20Modeling Multiscale Chiral Media
Quantum chemical molecular analysis and design
used to predict and optimize chiral parameter
?. A. Baev et al., Optics Express 15, 5730 (2007)
Characterized Material
Monomeric Ni Complex(chiral organometallic
complex)
21Modeling NIM assisted optical power limiting (OPL)
TPA enhancement factor for a sandwiched
structure containing 12.5 mm of TPA material.
Baev, E. Furlani, M. Samoc, and P.N. Prasad,
Negative refractivity assisted optical power
limiting, J. Appl. Phys. 102, 043101, 2007.
Optical limiting curves
Conclusion TPA-based OPL can be enhanced and
optimized using focusing by NIM slabs.
22Modeling NIM assisted OPL
Two-photon absorbing slab s 1000 GM, d 200 mm
Measure Iout
Measure Iinp
PML
PML
Concave lense, n 1.2, to compensate for
aperture-induced focusing
PML
PML
TPA NIM slab s 1000 GM, n -1.4, d 200 mm
23OPL performance
24Modeling plasmonic nanoscale trapping
Polarization Dependent Trapping
TM analysis
TE Analysis
FScat
TE Trap
TM Trap
k
-E2
-E2
Plot of Fx and Fy
Plot of Fx and Fy
Use of gradient force potential Vtrap ? -E2 to
verify 3D trapping
25Modeling Scattering Optical Elements (SOE)
Possible realization Dynamical patterning liquid
crystal with optical tweezers
Example Demultiplexer A. Hakansson et al, Appl.
Phys. Lett. 87, 193506 (2005)
26ILPB Metamaterial Publications and Presentations
- E. P. Furlani and A. Baev, Electromagnetic
Analysis of Cloaking Metamaterial Structures,
Proc. COMSOL Conf. October 2008. - E. P. Furlani and A. Baev, Full-Wave Analysis
of Nanoscale Optical Trapping, Proc. COMSOL
Conf. October 2008. - E. P. Furlani and A. Baev, Free-space
Excitation of Resonant Cavities Formed from
Cloaking Metamaterial, submitted to
Metamaterials, Sept 2008. - E. P. Furlani, A. Baev and P. N. Prasad,
Optical Nanotrapping Using Illuminated Metallic
Nanostructures Analysis and Applications, Proc.
Nanotech Conf. 2008. - E. P. Furlani and A. Baev, Optical Nanotrapping
using Cloaking Metamaterial, first revision under
review, Metamaterials, 2008. - A. Baev, E. P. Furlani, P. N. Prasad, A. N.
Grigorenko, and N. W. Roberts, Laser
Nnanotrapping and Manipulation of Nanoscale
Objects using Subwavelength Apertured Plasmonic
Media, J. Appl. Phys. 103, 084316, 2008. - A. Baev, M. Samoc, P. N. Prasad, M. Krykunov,
and J. Autschbach, A Quantum Chemical Approach
to the Design of Chiral Negative Index
Materials, Opt. Exp. 15, 9, 5730-5741, 2007. - A. Baev, E. P. Furlani, M. Samoc, and P. N.
Prasad, Negative Refractivity assisted Optical
Power Limiting, J. Appl. Phys. 102, 043101, 2007.